Growing Pains

It’s not surprising that the band named after a larger-than-life icon representing the overstimulated pop culture of the ’80s would aim to mimic the cocaine-fueled power-pop of that era. But what may surprise new listeners and seasoned fans alike is the Mr. T Experience’s (relatively) mature songwriting and unconventional recording…

Unmodified

Kimber Lanning is a petite, fair-haired lady. Plopped down in a beanbag chair in a corner of her Tempe Stinkweeds record store and surrounded by records, tee shirts and magazines, Lanning’s youthful face and diminutive figure suggest an earnest indie-rock kid rather than the self-made businesswoman she is. Lanning has…

Molten Wax

Nebula To the Center (Sub Pop) Duuuuuuude! “Please do not call Nebula ‘Stoner Rock,'” begs the press materials for the Los Angeles band’s first full-length. There are a few variations on the stoner rock theme, so let’s be specific. Among the subgenres, there are the “only sounds good when high”…

Babes in Arms

“Detroit is a virtual ghost town except for the music scene.” So says John Krautner of Motor City rock band The Go. The 22-year-old guitarist speaks with authority, having lived in and around the city his whole life. He’s watched as depressed economic conditions and urban flight have turned the…

Wayne’s World

“Flying through the air with the greatest of ease!” the thrash-voiced singer crows as a pair of cherry-colored panties floats onto the Coliseum stage. “Oftentimes, they are still warm.” A woman from the front row stands, moves to the stage’s bow and raises her hand to the singer. The singer…

Rock ‘n’ Roll for Dummies

Wanna know how come no one paints his or her favorite band’s name on the back of a denim jacket anymore? It’s not because blue jean jackets are out of style — it’s that rock bands are. No kidding, there ain’t a group out there worth cracking out the acrylics…

Unconsciously Brilliant

Retrospectives of bands are so de rigueur these days that no one even blinks when they walk into a store on new-release day to encounter a new four-disc boxed-set anthology of some rock superstar’s collective wheezings, a handy-dandy greatest hits package (featuring, of course, two “new” compositions to enhance the…

Beyond the Fringe

Over the course of the last decade or so, rappers have made a tradition of exaggerating the misery of their childhoods. Some emcees truly grew up in environments marked by grinding poverty, rampant crime and utter hopelessness, but plenty of others who claim to know about the mean streets firsthand…

Molten Wax

Paul McCartney Run Devil Run (Capitol) When Paul finds himself in times of trouble, personally or professionally, like most veterans he turns to the oldies. From “Get Back” to Choba B CCCP, he’s retraced his baby steps in an effort to figure out where he’s lost his one-fourth of the…

Lamb of Garth, Have Mercy on Us!

This is the type of thing you dream about. A bloated celebrity making a horrible slip like this. This is the type of thing a whole country can mock. I hope Garth (or Chris?) likes shame, because he’s gonna receive a heapin’ helpin’. — a music fan from Detroit, Amazon.com…

Pennywisdom

Pennywise is probably the most pleasant, friendliest band that sometimes pukes on people and takes hostages. The Hermosa Beach, California, quartet are punks, though they are positive rather than nihilistic, and thought-provoking rather than typically didactic. The band’s upbeat-yet-laid-back attitude makes sense considering its surf-town home base is the party…

Rock of Pages

Just as there’s a lot of dreadful music worth avoiding, there’s also no shortage of truly rotten books about music to waste your time. As a culture, we’re inclined to think that just because a book makes it into the library, it’s literature. But anyone who’s ever checked out a…

War in Peace

Bill Bentley never met Alexander “Skip” Spence, never even spoke with the man whose music meant so much to him. He had come close before, when Spence’s erstwhile band, Moby Grape, played at the Catacomb Club in Bentley’s hometown of Houston. But Spence wasn’t there that night, kept off the…

Trunk Restoration

For much of 1999, word was that the seeming demise of pop eclectics Trunk Federation had been the result of two main factors, the first being lead singer and de facto leader Jim Andreas’ relapse into substance abuse after eight years of sobriety. Sensing that things were taking a dark…

Molten Wax

Mark Lanegan I’ll Take Care of You (Sub Pop) There are some kinds of music that really work only at certain times of day or during specific activities. You’ve got good driving music, good drinking music, good dishwashing music. Mark Lanegan’s records are of the late-night, half-tanked, down-and-miserable, stare-out-the-trailer-at-the-stars variety…

Soul Crusaders

“My idea,” said Bruce Springsteen in 1996, responding to a reporter’s query about the songwriter’s intent, “wasn’t to get the next 10 songs and put out an album and get out on the road. I wrote with purpose in mind, so I edited very intensely the music I was writing…

Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow

Here’s to the girl with the little red shoes, She likes to party, She likes the booze, She lost her cherry, but that’s no sin, Thank God, she’s still got the box the cherry came in. — from Warrant’s official Web site With the same courage we’d imagine a fly…

Never Too Old to Tango

Guitarist Ariel Sanzo sounds like a typical modern rock musician when he talks about his inspirations. Like any American kid who came of age in the late ’70s and early ’80s, Sanzo, who grew up in Buenos Aires and plays in both a three-piece punk group named Pez and the…

Not Dead, Just Hot

Within the Valley music scene, few artists or songwriters enjoy the kind of universal admiration of Dead Hot Workshop’s Brent Babb. So it comes as no surprise that the city’s musical cognoscenti are abuzz at the prospect of seeing the band perform for the first time in several months –…

Molten Wax

Dot Allison Afterglow (Deconstruction/Arista) From the vantage point of this side of the pond, Scottish outfit One Dove’s early-’90s brief arc, yielding but one album (1993’s Morning Dove White), may have seemed a mere blip emanating from the UK rave/house scene of the time. Same old story, y’know: DJs and…

Mr. Clyne’s Wild Ride

Roger Clyne is in a reflective mood. The Peacemakers’ front man has had plenty to think about over the last year. He got married, became a father for the third time, lost his record deal and saw his band break up under acrimonious circumstances. He went on to form a…

Genre Divide

For the unwitting punk-rock aesthete, happening upon Sweep the Leg Johnny in a crowded dive bar can be startling. The four unassuming lads from Chicago who make up the band crank out an intense, immense saxophone-fueled brand of post-punk that doesn’t lend itself to immediate comprehension. Even for those who…